Meet the Women at the Centre of Ukraine’s Resurgent HIV epidemic – PoliticalCritique.org

Living with HIV in Ukraine is fraught with stigma and discrimination. Its even harder if youre a woman.

One of the protagonists of Balka, a film which follows the lives of women struggling with drug use and HIV in Ukraine. Source: Open Society Foundations

On International Womens Day in early March, the Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS) published a report stating there is an urgent need to increase HIV treatment and prevention for women and girls around the world. Girls and women are still bearing the brunt of the AIDS epidemic, Michel Sidib, the Executive Director of UNAIDS, laments in the reports introduction, pointing to stigma, discrimination and violence as factors that make women more vulnerable to HIV than men.

None of this is news to Svitlana Moroz, who heads up Positive Women, a Ukrainian NGO that advocates for the rights of women living with HIV across the country. Last month, Moroz and other activists filed a report to the UN, alleging violations of human rights of HIV-positive women in Ukraine.

Other women have been accused of being drug addicts, denied health care and had their children take from them all because of their HIV-positive status.

Moroz and other activists have collected disturbing stories from women with HIV across Ukraine. Natalia, a pregnant HIV-positive woman in western Ukraine, was turned away from a maternity ward, being told there was no place for people like her. Another pregnant HIV-positive woman managed to get into the hospital, but was placed in a room with broken windows in winter she was told they couldnt put her with other women. Other women have been accused of being drug addicts, denied health care and had their children take from them all because of their HIV-positive status.

Some women have lost even more. Vera, an HIV-positive sex worker, gave birth by caesarean section in hospital. When she awoke to ask the doctor, a woman, how the surgery had gone, the doctor replied by saying shed performed a tubal ligation without Veras consent: You have no right to build a family and have children.

Vera, unfortunately, isnt alone. She is one of many HIV-positive women in Ukraine who have had to deal with institutional discrimination.

Prior to 2014, Ukraine was putting up a strong fight against one of the worst HIV epidemics in Europe. Thanks to concerted efforts from government, civil society and international donors to provide treatment and prevention programmes to at-risk populations, by 2012 Ukraine had actually reported a decline in new HIV cases for the first time. It looked as though the country was about to turn a corner.

Thats all changed, following the outbreak of conflict in eastern Ukraine in 2014 and the countrys turbulent political and economic situation. Ukraines Ministry of Health estimates that at the beginning of 2016 there were 220,000 people living with HIV/AIDS in Ukraine a prevalence rate of 0.9%, with almost equal numbers of men and women testing positive.

The trends over the last year are worrying. According to the most recent statistics from Ukraines Public Health Center, part of Ukraines Ministry of Health, the number of new officially registered people with HIV/AIDS rose by almost eight percent in 2016; most (62%) of new infections came from sexual intercourse, while 22% from intravenous drug use. While deaths from HIV-related causes have been on a decline worldwide, the mortality rate from HIV-related causes increased in Ukraine by seven percent in 2016 the majority (52%) caused by tuberculosis.

These official Ukrainian government statistics dont include Crimea or the parts of Donetsk and Luhansk oblasts not controlled by Ukraine (the so-called Donetsk Peoples Republic and Luhansk Peoples Republic). This means these figures could actually be an underestimate, especially since Donetsk, says UNAIDS Ukraine country director Jacek Tymszko, has long been an epicentre of Ukraines HIV epidemic. More than half of all officially registered Ukrainians living with HIV live in Odessa, Dnipropetrovsk and Donetsk oblasts as well as in Kyiv.

Ilona, a social worker in Kyiv who works with people who have HIV/AIDS, knows how tough it is to be a woman living with HIV in Ukraine she tested positive herself for HIV ten years ago.

Ilona tells me about a time when, before shed disclosed her status to many people, she and her husband had a group of friends over, including her mother-in-law. Some of these friends, Ilona says, were HIV-positive, and her mother-in-law (a good, accepting person, she made pains to stress to me) knew about the HIV status of some of these friends and had no problem with it.

But when they left, she tells me, my mother-in-law asked me to help disinfect everything they touched, all despite the fact HIV cant be spread by touching shared objects like toilets or cutlery. With her mother-in-law at that time unaware of her HIV-positive status, Ilona helped her disinfect and scrub everything her HIV-positive friends had laid a hand on.

Shes able to laugh about it now, but it still hurt. It was quite humiliating for me, Ilona says.

That said, there has been some progress in reducing stigma against people with HIV in Ukraine. A Democratic Initiatives poll from 2016 showed that 21% of people surveyed believed that people living with AIDS should be isolated from society, down from 36% in 2006 and 50% in 1991. Its moving in the right direction, says Dmytro Sherembey from the All-Ukrainian Network of People Living With HIV/AIDS, but its still very strong.

Aside from her own experiences, Ilonas worked with women of all ages and backgrounds whove tested positive for HIV. Shes seen how women of all backgrounds particularly older women, she says have a difficult time accepting their diagnosis. They see [HIV] as a disease for those at the bottom, Ilona says.

The findings from the survey suggest the likelihood of being the victim of violence increases after testing positive for HIV.

This type of attitude that HIV is a disease just for those at the bottom can manifest itself in violence against women with HIV. Violence against women is bad enough in Ukraine, but according to a November 2016 survey Positive Women conducted with 1,000 HIV-positive women across the country, more than a third (35%) of women living with HIV reported that theyd been the victim of violence from either their partner or husband, and almost half (47%) said theyd had no support afterwards. Worse still, the findings from the survey suggest the likelihood of being the victim of violence increases after testing positive for HIV.

Violence against women with HIV can even extend to their children, especially if they also have HIV. Olga Rudneva, Executive Director of the Elena Pinchuk ANTIAIDS Foundation in Kyiv, tells me about an incident in a small town in Dnipropetrovsk oblast, where a social worker started trying to raise money for a family with an HIV-positive child. The family, including the children, had stones thrown at them and were eventually forced to flee the town.

Its 2017, in the middle of Europe, Rudneva sighs.

Outright discrimination against women with HIV in healthcare environments is a problem in Ukraine. The report Positive Women and other activists filed with the UN last month has several stories of HIV-positive women being denied access to health care because of their HIV status.

In 2016, when it was time for delivery, I came to the perinatal center, but the administration refused to admit me, saying that for people like you, we have no place, Natalia, a HIV-positive woman, is quoted as saying in the report.

Likewise, a social worker recounts how an HIV-positive client of theirs was placed in a hospital room with broken windows during the winter, on the grounds that there werent any other rooms available, and another spoke of how a client of hers was denied in vitro fertilisation (IVF) because of her HIV-positive status.

the doctor started screaming at me and accused me of not telling her about my [HIV] diagnosis.

At her office in Kyiv, Svitlana Moroz walks me through the findings of the survey. The numbers tell a story of how health care providers can discriminate against HIV-positive women across Ukraine, and how many of these women dont know where to turn for help. One-third (33%) of women, when asked whether they believed healthcare providers would keep their HIV status private, said they didnt believe they would. Almost one-third (31%) dont know their rights and dont know who to talk to if they feel their rights have been violated.

In Positive Womens survey report, one womans account stands out as an example of the discrimination women living with HIV can face at an institutional level.

Marina, a then-pregnant HIV-positive woman, recounted to the researchers at Positive Women that, at a gynecological clinic, the doctor started screaming at me and accused me of not telling her about my [HIV] diagnosis. She said shed sue me because I could infect her, and added a few humiliating epithets So youre a drug addict, right?

I was afraid to go to the doctor for a long time because theyd judge me, Marina says in the report. Talking about my status was still humiliating. So I never asked for help, even when I felt pain that was getting stronger by the day. I was taken to the gynecological department bleeding, unconscious.

It turned out to be an ectopic pregnancy. My life was saved but, sadly, Ill never be able to have children.

Women living with HIV arent always able to access the healthcare services they need. According to Positive Womens survey, only 36% of HIV-positive women reported receiving regular cervical screening and only 32% had regular consultations with a doctor about breast cancer even though women living with HIV have a greater risk of developing cancer.

Part of the issue, Natalia Ruda from the AIDS Healthcare Foundation (AHF) tells me, is that many HIV-positive women dont know enough about their own health to know what they could be asking for. She says that her organisation, which provides HIV testing services and treatment across Ukraine, has seen more and more women over 40 coming in and getting tested for HIV and testing positive.

No ones telling them about their health, Natalia says, about risks, about safe sex.

Its something Ill never forget, this is how Ilona, the social worker living with HIV, describes her treatment at a Kyiv maternity hospital several years ago.

Ilona was in a special unit of the hospital for women with pregnancy difficulties. There were a few other HIV-positive women on the unit with her and, because of her personal and professional background, she met up with the chief doctor to offer some help.

He screamed at me, Ilona says. He said: You sleep around, get infected! Its a headache to deal with you, to treat you!

I learned later this was his manner with all patients with HIV during first contact, basically telling them off, Ilona says. She tells me that this story is quite typical, that an HIV-positive womans first experience with a doctor is often aggressive and accusatory.

Ironically, Ilona laughs, shes now friends with the doctor, but the memory of this incident still bothers her. When you feel that coldness, indifference, Ilona tells me, you feel despised. You feel theyre not ready to pay to attention to you, not ready to give any time for you.

The Global Fund to Fight AIDS, TB and Malaria, by far the largest international donor to the HIV/AIDS fight in Ukraine, had originally planned to significantly cut funding in 2017 to Ukraine. Activists were concerned that the situation in Ukraine could be a larger-scale rerun of what happened in Romania, when a cut in Global Fund money contributed to a sharp increase in HIV infection rates among at-risk populations.

Fortunately, as several activists and officials were keen to point out, the Global Fund has since stepped up with more than $120m in continued and emergency funding over the next three years. More funding has come from other sources the Ukrainian state is fully funding opioid substitution therapy in 2017 for the first time ever and the US government recently announced it will providing almost $40m in emergency funding.

But, as Dr Natalia Nizova from Ukraines Public Health Center tells me, for us its absolutely clear that the situation of huge donor support will not last forever, given that Global Fund is expected to withdraw most of its funding from the country in 2020. Effectively tackling and turning around Ukraines HIV epidemic will require transition planning and cooperation with advocacy groups like Positive Women.

Above all, it will require working closely with Ukraines politicians and the countrys cash-strapped state to ensure HIV remains high on the agenda so that Ukraine, in just a few years, can take over and effectively fund its HIV treatment and prevention programmes. This is our last window of opportunity, says Dr Nizova.

But Svitlana Moroz says women with HIV are still struggling to have their voices heard. Ukraines current national AIDS council and other committees have no HIV-positive women on them, she says.

Its very important to mobilise and empower women living with HIV, Moroz tells me. More women living with HIV, she says, need to be invited into policy and programme discussions across Ukraine, at all levels of government.

Moroz, for her part, sounds determined to be part of the conversation, whether HIV-positive women like her are invited to the table or not.

We say: nothing for us without us.

The piece was originally published on opendemocracy.net

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Meet the Women at the Centre of Ukraine's Resurgent HIV epidemic - PoliticalCritique.org

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